Results 291 to 300 of about 2,021,560 (340)
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Gilyak lenition as a phonological rule 1
, 1993This paper offers a phonological analysis of lenition in Gilyak (Nivkh, Nivx), a Paleo‐Siberian language. Gilyak lenition involves spirantization of stops when these stops are preceded by stops, vowels or glides.
J. Blevins
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Sound Change, Phonological Rules, and Articulatory Phonology
Belgian Journal of Linguistics, 1994Abstract. The gestural model of Articulatory Phonology currently being developed by Browman and Goldstein provides a new way of modelling both synchronic and diachronic phonetic processes as well as certain types of synchronic phonological rules. Although Browman and Goldstein place stringent restrictions on the model, ruling out categorical deletion ...
April McMahon, Paul Foulkes
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Why the Phonological Component must be Serial and Rule‐Based 1
, 20081. Introduction This chapter provides general arguments for replacing Optimality Theory with a theory that employs ordered rules and derivations. Between 1968 and 1993 the majority of phonologists worked within a theoretical framework of Derivational ...
B. Vaux
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The Ordering of Phonological Rules
International Journal of American Linguistics, 19681. An acceptance of the validity of phonological rules as a means of describing certain aspects of a language's structure, together with a recognition that such rules must be at least partially ordered with respect to each other, raises certain problems which have never been fully aired in the linguistic literature. I wish in this paper to mention some
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A Phonological Rules System [PDF]
Abstract : A phonological rules system has been implemented as a language extension of SDC INFIX LISP. The system can be used in two modes: as an interactive rule tester, and as a library of functions with other LISP programs. The key language capabilities are: definitions of phonological rules; definitions of ordered rule application; definitions of ...
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Rule-ordering in child phonology
Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue canadienne de linguistique, 1974In his recent dissertation, David Stampe (1972) discusses the notions of natural processes in child phonology. Earlier, Ingram (1971) discussed the concepts and formulations of phonological rules in child language. What we propose to demonstrate here is that the rules inherent in acquisitional phonology are ordered and, moreover, that these rules are ...
Mary W. Salus, Peter H. Salus
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2019
This chapter focuses on formulating North American English (NAE) phonological rules and discussing their pedagogical implications. It begins with a brief account of NAE phonology as a rule-governed system and then outlines feature-based phonology as a theoretical framework in which phonological rules operate. The chapter further defines an inventory of
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This chapter focuses on formulating North American English (NAE) phonological rules and discussing their pedagogical implications. It begins with a brief account of NAE phonology as a rule-governed system and then outlines feature-based phonology as a theoretical framework in which phonological rules operate. The chapter further defines an inventory of
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Language, 1967
This work contains a discussion of redundancy rules and the role they play in the phonological component of a generative grammar. Phonological redundancy rules were first given a clear theoretical foundation in the MORPHEME STRUCTURE RULES used by Halle (1959) to predict redundant phonological information in morphemes.
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This work contains a discussion of redundancy rules and the role they play in the phonological component of a generative grammar. Phonological redundancy rules were first given a clear theoretical foundation in the MORPHEME STRUCTURE RULES used by Halle (1959) to predict redundant phonological information in morphemes.
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The 'word' in polysynthetic languages: phonological and syntactic challenges
, 2017Polysynthesis presupposes the existence of ‘words’, a domain or unit of phonology and syntax that is extremely variable within and across languages: what behaves as a ‘word’ with respect to one phonological or syntactic rule or constraint may not behave ...
B. Bickel, Fernando Zúñiga
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2017
In speech synthesis, it is necessary to identify the graphemes in every word to be converted to speech. This chapter deals with this process normally referred to as text-to-phoneme or grapheme-to-phoneme conversion. Many rules for such conversion, known as phonology in linguistic parlance, have been proposed by the eminent linguists for this dialect ...
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In speech synthesis, it is necessary to identify the graphemes in every word to be converted to speech. This chapter deals with this process normally referred to as text-to-phoneme or grapheme-to-phoneme conversion. Many rules for such conversion, known as phonology in linguistic parlance, have been proposed by the eminent linguists for this dialect ...
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